Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The case of a 1.5 year old girl with clinical traits of craniofacial dysmorphy, hypotonia, polydactyly and moderate mental retardation is presented. Routine cytogenetic study revealed the presence of a large additional chromosomal fragment associated with the nucleolus organizing region on one of chromosomes 13. The banding pattern suggested the additional fragment was a part of the long arm of this chromosome. The set of clinical symptoms was only partly consistent with those characteristic for trisomy 13q2 and 3. Application of the FISH technique with a chromosome 13 specific library enabled final confirmation of the origin of the extra chromosome fragment from the long arm of chromosome 13. The presented case proves the usefulness of the FISH technique for the diagnosis of chromosomal aberrations and for adequate clinical interpretation of cytogenetic results.
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PMID:[Partial trisomy of chromosome 13--diagnosis confirmed with the FISH in situ hybridization technique]. 896 97

We describe a familial mental retardation syndrome in a 30 year old, moderately mentally retarded female and her 59 year old maternal aunt. Both presented the distinct association of (1) a non-progressive neurological syndrome with ataxia and hypotonia, (2) similar craniofacial appearance with a narrow forehead, prominent supraorbital ridges and tendency to synophrys, deeply set eyes with short, upward slanting palpebral fissures, short philtrum, and large mouth, (3) hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism, and (4) retinal dystrophy with onset in early adulthood.
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PMID:Two adult females with a distinct familial mental retardation syndrome: non-progressive neurological symptoms with ataxia and hypotonia, similar facial appearance, hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism, and retinal dystrophy. 959 31

We report a 22-year-old man with hydrocephalus caused by aqueductal stenosis. The patient was diagnosed with Kabuki make-up syndrome based on associated findings such as a peculiar facies, postnatal growth deficiency, brachydactyly of the fifth fingers, undescended testes, and malrotation of the colon. Kabuki make-up syndrome, recognized in Japan in 1981, is characterized by five cardinal manifestations: a peculiar facies, skeletal anomalies, dermatoglyphic anomalies, slight to moderate mental retardation, and postnatal dwarfism. Neurological anomalies have been reported to include neonatal hypotonia, feeding problems, seizures, West syndrome, microcephaly, brain atrophy, GH deficiency, precocious puberty, delayed sexual development, and diabetes insipidus. Aqueductal stenosis may be caused by part of the series of midline anomalies. Physicians should pay attention to associated anomalous characteristics suggesting a malformation syndrome when they encounter nontumoral aqueductal stenosis in adolescents or adults.
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PMID:Kabuki make-up syndrome and report of a case with hydrocephalus. 969 34

We report a case of inv dup (15) mosaic with moderate mental retardation and symptomatic generalized epilepsy whose attacks were successfully controlled by phenytoin. Battaglia et al. (1997) reported four cases of inv dup (15) syndrome, whose symptoms contained intractable Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, moderate or severe mental retardation, diffuse hypotonia, and minor anomaly. The present case was diagnosed as mosaicism of inv dup (15) syndrome. It was suspected that the patient had a treatable epileptic seizure and no minor anomaly because of the mosaicism.
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PMID:[A case of inv dup (15) mosaic with mental retardation and symptomatic generalized epilepsy]. 1022 91

A microscopic deletion of chromosome 22q11.2 has been identified in most patients with the DiGeorge, velocardiofacial syndrome, conotruncal anomaly face syndrome, and in some patients with isolated conotruncal cardiac anomalies. This study presents the neurodevelopmental outcome, including cognitive development, language development, speech, neuromuscular development, and behavioral characteristics of 40 preschool children (ages 13 to 63 months) who have been diagnosed with the 22q11.2 deletion. The impact of cardiac disease, cardiac surgery, and the palatal anomalies on this population was also studied. In the preschool years, children with a 22q11.2 deletion are most commonly found to be developmentally delayed, have mild hypotonia, and language and speech delays. The more significantly delayed children are at high risk to be subsequently diagnosed with mild or moderate mental retardation. The global delays and the variations in intelligence found are directly associated with the 22q11.2 deletion and are not explained by physical anomalies such as palatal defects or cardiac defects, or therapeutic interventions such as cardiac surgery. Our findings demonstrate that there is a pattern of significant speech disorders within this population. All of the children had late onset of verbal speech. Behavioral outcomes included both inhibition and attention disorders. Early intervention services are strongly recommended beginning in infancy to address the delays in gross motor skills, speech and language, and global developmental delays.
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PMID:Cognitive and behavior profile of preschool children with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion. 1040 65

A 6-month-old girl presented with hypotonia and mild psychomotor retardation. Subsequently, an atypical manifestation of a nonketotic hyperglycinaemia was diagnosed, confirmed by significantly reduced activity of the glycine cleavage system in the liver tissue. After the patient developed hypsarrhythmia and had a single cerebral seizure, treatment with both sodium benzoate and dextromethorphan was started. During the following year, the girl was free of seizures with improvement of the EEG activity and showed retarded but continuously progressing psychomotor development. At the age of 20 months she began to walk freely but had generalized muscular hypotonia and moderate mental retardation. Discontinuation of dextromethorphan medication after one year of treatment did not change the clinical and electroencephalographic status. However, after cessation of sodium benzoate therapy, epileptic activity in the EEG and behavioural changes occurred. These changes disappeared promptly after sodium benzoate therapy was reinstituted. Thus, this case of mild atypical nonketotic hyperglycinaemia with only moderate psychomotor retardation and without epilepsy benefited from treatment with sodium benzoate in terms of electroencephalographic and behavioural changes.
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PMID:Effect of sodium benzoate in the treatment of atypical nonketotic hyperglycinaemia. 1068 5

Prader-Willi syndrome, first described in 1956, is characterized by marked hypotonia, hyperphagia, severe obesity, short stature, hypogonadism, orthopedic problems, breathing-related sleep disorders, mild to moderate mental retardation and behavioral abnormalities. The incidence of this syndrome, an expression of a genetic imprinting error in chromosome 15, is 1:10,000-1:25,000. We describe the medical, emotional and cognitive parameters of 34 patients in our multidisciplinary clinic for Prader-Willi syndrome. Their ages range from 5 months to 40 years and 20 are males. Excessive weight gain started at the age of 6 years, increasing to 170-370% of that predicted by height and age and short stature started after the age of 12. All males have hypogonadism; 6 patients have scoliosis. Breathing-related sleep disorders have occurred in 15. Children above the age of 8 years underwent neuropsychological assessment: half (9/18) have borderline intelligence while a quarter have low-normal intelligence and the remainder mild to moderate mental retardation. Behavioral and social problems are common, and become more prominent during adolescence. ADHD was diagnosed in 10/18.
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PMID:[Prader-Willi syndrome: medical, emotional and cognitive facets]. 1088 49

Rett syndrome (RTT) is an X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the MECP2 gene, with apparent lethality in male embryos. However, recent studies indicate that mutations in the MECP2 gene can cause congenital encephalopathy, an Angelman-like phenotype and even nonspecific mental retardation in males. We report on a 10-year-old boy with moderate mental retardation, hypotonia, obesity and gynaecomastia and a de novo 2-bp deletion in the MECP2 gene that resulted in a frameshift and premature stop codon. As some of the clinical features were suggestive of the Prader-Willi syndrome, it might be worthwhile screening for MECP2 mutations in patients with an atypical Prader-Willi phenotype but without the characteristic abnormalities on chromosome 15q. This report contributes to the phenotypic knowledge of male patients with MECP2 mutations. Moreover, this is the first reported male case of a de novo MECP2 mutation.
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PMID:De novo MECP2 frameshift mutation in a boy with moderate mental retardation, obesity and gynaecomastia. 1208 20

Succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSADH) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder affecting CNS gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) degradation. SSADH, in conjunction with GABA transaminase, converts GABA to succinate. In the absence of SSADH, GABA is converted to 4-OH-butyrate. The presence of 4-OH-butyrate, a highly volatile compound, may be undetected on routine organic acid analysis. Urine organic acid testing was modified at the authors' institution in 1999 to screen for the excretion of 4-OH-butyrate by selective ion monitoring gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in addition to total ion chromatography. Since then, five patients with 4-hydroxybutyric aciduria have been identified. The authors add the clinical, neuroimaging, and EEG findings from a new cohort of patients to 51 patients reported in the literature with clinical details. Ages ranged from 1 to 21 years at diagnosis. Clinical findings include mild-moderate mental retardation, disproportionate language dysfunction, hypotonia, hyporeflexia, autistic behaviors, seizures, and hallucinations. Brain MRI performed in five patients at the authors' institution revealed symmetric increased T2 signal in the globus pallidi. SSADH deficiency is an under-recognized, potentially manageable neurometabolic disorder. Urine organic acid analysis should include a sensitive method for the detection of 4-hydroxybutyrate and should be obtained from patients with mental retardation or neuropsychiatric disturbance of unknown etiology.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency. 1274 23

We report the characterisation of a de novo supernumerary chromosome marker in a mosaic state (50%) by comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) in an 8-year-old child with hypotonia, dysmorphia and mild-to-moderate mental retardation. We describe the combined use of CGH and fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) to identify the origin of the additional chromosomal material. Visual analysis of 10 CGH-metaphase spreads revealed a gain of green fluorescent signal on pericentromeric region of chromosome 17. The CGH finding was confirmed by FISH analysis using a whole chromosome 17 paint, a chromosome 17 centromeric probe and the probe coding for the Smith-Magenis locus in 17p11.2. These results show that performing both CGH and FISH in combination with classical karyotyping will certainly allow the identification of imbalanced chromosome rearrangements and, by the way, allow the identification of genes involved in mental retardation and/or malformative pathology.
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PMID:CGH and direct diagnosis of mosaic structural chromosomal abnormalities: description of a mosaic ring chromosome 17 and review of the literature. 1277 38


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